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 1   T-I|    Every fear harms verse: I’m lost and always~afraid of a sword
 2   T-I|     all’s calm, if his anger’s lost its bite,~if, while you’
 3   T-I|  Penates,~and often called her lost husband’s name,~groaning
 4   T-I|    cruel death,~if one already lost may be un-lost.~~ Book TI.
 5   T-I|    places?~Was it all in vain, lost in the ocean winds?~Is it
 6  T-II|    between two enemy pieces is lost,~how to pursue with force,
 7 T-III|       remains in the city I’ve lost.~Ah, how often I’ve knocked
 8 T-III|   Think that I perished when I lost my native land:~that was
 9 T-III|         Eumedes would not have lost his child, if Dolon,~his
10 T-III|      precious rill of water be lost:~I first discerned it, in
11 T-III|         Look at me, my country lost, you two, and my home,~and
12 T-III|        without nurture,~and is lost, dried up, by a long neglect.~
13  T-IV| Orpheus mourned the wife twice lost to him,~as he drew the trees
14  T-IV|    except my troubles.~Since I lost my native land, the threshing-floor’
15  T-IV|        went on, part of myself lost.~Still, I achieved tender
16   T-V|        an exile, in the city I lost.~Present times would be
17   T-V|      if all sense of what I’ve lost should leave me,~still fear
18  ExII|        I think, for whom I was lost when my reputation~was buried,
19  ExII|    down to the shores of Styx, lost you.~Dont think it’s so
20  ExII|     heart desires the fields I lost,~the noble landscapes of
21   ExI|        your leisure time’s not lost in idle sleep,~you take
22 ExIII|     away and I’d think all was lost.~Though all my work depends
23 ExIII|    since I,~who have long been lost, try by my talent ~to be
24 ExIII|       to be one who is not yet lost to you, Maximus.~Repay me,
25 ExIII|    completely,~and know you’re lost, once and for all, with
26  ExIV|       it hasnt a useful herb,~lost as a rule among the tough
27  ExIV|    about, you, cruel one.~I’ve lost everything: only my life
28  IBIS|       my own hand:~whether I’m lost, shipwrecked by mighty waves,~
29   Ind|      poetry.~Book TV.V:27-64 A lost reference in his works.~
30   Ind|    epigrams?~Book TV.V:27-64 A lost reference in his works.~
31   Ind|       to ask for her life, but lost her when he broke the injunction
32   Ind|      Verres against Cicero but lost the case. He turned to a
33   Ind|     Metamorphoses, and wrote a lost play Medea about her.~Book
34   Ind|          See Milton’s Paradise Lost Book I, as the architect
35   Ind|       he faltered, and she was lost. He mourned her, and turned
36   Ind|     states. The tragedy is the lost Medea.~Book TIII.VII:1-54
37   Ind|      barbaric savages who have lost the culture of the original
38   Ind|      to drive the Sun chariot, lost control of the chariot and
39   Ind|      bones after his death, is lost: see also Pausanias VIII.
40   Ind|      barbaric savages who have lost the culture of the original
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